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Also, what occurs in mitosis and cytokinesis....?

II Cell Cycle
-stages/correct order
-Interphase
-Time spent in each phase
-Synthesis of organelles
-Cyclin-prtein that regulate cell division
-Checkpoint
-G1

2007-12-18 13:59:09 · 1 answers · asked by Anonymous in Science & Mathematics Biology

1 answers

You have too many question in one page here. Not sure what you want for the list you have below the question.

Cell division in animals - are you asking about cytokinesis?
The cell membrane pinches in around the equator in a line called the cleavage furrow. It continues to pinch in until the two daughter cells are separated.

Mitosis is the process of dividing the doubled DNA into two exactly identical nuclei.

The stages of the cell cycle are interphase, mitosis, and cytokinesis. Mitosis consists of prophase, metaphase, anaphase, and telophase.

Interphase is the part of the cell cycle in which the new daughter cells grow by adding cytoplasm and organelles (G1); copy their DNA if they are going to divide (S); and grow to an extra large size before dividing (G2).

Interphase is the part that is extremely variable. Sometimes interphase is just a matter of minutes or hours, and sometimes cells spend their entire lives in interphase. Of the other phases, anaphase is the shortest. You can find sites on the Internet that show a circle graph of the time spent in each phase. You may also have this graph in your textbook.

Synthesis of organelles happens in G1 and G2.

That's all I have for you.

2007-12-18 14:08:25 · answer #1 · answered by ecolink 7 · 1 0

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